Abstract

The two Kogia species, the pygmy sperm whale (K. breviceps) and the dwarf sperm whale (K. sima), have similar morphological and biological features as well as diets. Both species are deep divers, and both have wide distributions from tropical to warm-temperate zones. Although K. breviceps is larger than K. sima, there are few reports of habitat differentiation between the two species. The distribution of K. breviceps is concentrated in higher-latitudes, and this species dives deeper than K. sima. We investigated whether these two species differ in their population structures in the western North Pacific. Using stranded specimens from Japan, we compared the population genetic patterns of the two Kogia species using mtDNA control region variation (941bp). In total, 34 K. breviceps samples and 54 K. sima samples from stranded individuals around Japan were successfully sequenced. Thirty haplotypes were detected in K. breviceps and 34 in K. sima, indicating high genetic diversity for both. Almost all these haplotypes are unique to the western North Pacific, but did not constitute distinct phylogeographic clades within either species. We detected differences between the species in the shape of haplotype networks and in the potential time of population expansion, indicating that the western North Pacific population of the two biologically similar species could have different population demographies. This may reflect differences in evolutionary histories and in the details of their ecological niches.

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